[HN Gopher] Life Cycle of a Hornet Colony
___________________________________________________________________
Life Cycle of a Hornet Colony
Author : itronitron
Score : 37 points
Date : 2022-07-15 07:24 UTC (1 days ago)
(HTM) web link (www.vespa-crabro.com)
(TXT) w3m dump (www.vespa-crabro.com)
| 1shooner wrote:
| It is odd to see a perspective that advocates for the protection
| of hornets because they predate 'annoying or harmful' insects,
| since I can't really think of an insect that is more annoying or
| harmful than hornets.
| CoastalCoder wrote:
| I'm curious what insects the author had in mind.
|
| I have a deep hatred for hornets, but I can think of some other
| insect species I'm happy to keep in check: mosquitoes, ticks,
| horse flies / deer flies, cicadas, etc. And probably some
| caterpillars that can damage our trees by eating their leaves.
| mat24a wrote:
| In our greenhouse this year a wasp colony formed without anyone
| noticing.
|
| But luckily the particular species in there is very peaceful and
| has a comparatively small colony. What is very interesting is
| that this species does not enclose their nest but build it in a
| completely exposed way. Very cool as you can always see whats
| going on in the nest.
|
| https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Feldwespen#/media/Datei:Nido_d...
| This is a picture from wikipedia showcasing the unique nest
| structure.
| [deleted]
| jmnicolas wrote:
| I have a lot of them around my house in eastern France. Not
| dangerous at all (if you don't attack the nest of course) so I
| let them be.
|
| They're a new specie here, before it was too cold for them to
| thrive.
| gumby wrote:
| Interesting that wasp queens (hornet and wasp are basically
| synonyms) last only one season while bee queens last for several.
|
| Ant and termite queens can allegedly live longer, even decades.
| What an existance!
| mathgeek wrote:
| > wasp queens (hornet and wasp are basically synonyms)
|
| While you are correct in your usage of "wasp queens" when
| talking about hornets, it's because hornets are a type of wasp.
| It's important to know the distinction if you share a habitat
| with both, though (even if just to know what type of nest is
| growing under your awnings).
| dylan604 wrote:
| Or competitive high schools where these are the two different
| mascots.
| stickfigure wrote:
| No mention of the underground-dwelling yellowjackets ("meat
| bees") that infest northern California picnics. They are
| definitely not friendly, and not in short supply.
| jyounker wrote:
| TIL recently: Skunks eat yellowjackets, digging up the entire
| nest.
| quercusa wrote:
| I think these are actually https://extension.psu.edu/german-
| yellowjackets so I'm kind of confused.
|
| > _Unlike wasps, hornets don 't plague picnic areas in the
| summer in search of food. There is thus no danger of being
| stung in the throat by a hornet!_
|
| I'm not sure about this either - they seem attracted to open
| cola cans.
| dylan604 wrote:
| Well, that just sounds like another great reason to not drink
| sodas! Then again, not getting stung in the throat by a
| hornet is pretty compelling for just about anything though.
___________________________________________________________________
(page generated 2022-07-16 23:00 UTC)